Example sentences of "[adv] [verb] rise to [noun] " in BNC.

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1 Since ‘ compliance ’ is an administrative definition and since production or treatment processes can constantly give rise to changes in water quality , field men must be ever-vigilant in the face of uncertainty .
2 The section is intended to give the police power to impose conditions on ‘ coercive ’ marches which will not necessarily give rise to disorder ; a National Front march through a predominantly Asian district may well prompt many of the citizens simply to board up their properties and remain indoors .
3 The insults or stresses which cause the imbalances and so give rise to disease can be of two types :
4 Flu viruses are notorious for the ease in which they undergo such antigenic shifts , as they are called , and so giving rise to epidemics .
5 Also , the change in the potential difference phasor V over the infinitesimal element has been neglected in arriving at equation ( 9.74 ) since it only gives rise to terms that are second order in smallness .
6 Greek civilization not only gave rise to philosophy but it also produced , in the fifth century BC , the first real historians .
7 The rewards and their distribution become a part of the social order and thus give rise to stratification ( Davis and Moore .
8 Yet another type of vocabulary can have difference in meaning for patient and nurse and thereby give rise to difficulties — words describing parts of the body , though having a particular anatomical reference , do not necessarily have that reference for lay people , even intelligent lay people .
9 For reasons to be explained , the original legislation was found to be defective , and was amended in 1976 ( and placed into the legislative context of the Public Order Act 1936 ) , but even after amendment it still gave rise to complaints that it fell short of the aspirations of its promoters in its effects .
10 This hedging usually gives rise to interest income in the form of ‘ contangos ’ which reflect the difference between metal interest rates and US dollar rates .
11 DRG 's property assets have also given rise to argument .
12 Financial collapses , major frauds , litigation , environmental responsibility , all have understandably given rise to demands for companies to strengthen their control over their business and their public accountability .
13 The hardware used for data collection can also give rise to differences in recognition performance .
14 " Part of a building " can also give rise to problems .
15 While this may be a means of sharing responsibilities and caring , it may also give rise to tensions in overcrowded households .
16 Thus a government which while adhering to the rule of law narrowly defined , flouted all or most of the practices generally thought to be covered by the rule of law broadly defined would also give rise to doubts about its legitimacy .
17 The explanations in ( 8 ) , ( 9 ) and ( 10 ) are concerned with physical events , but psychological phenomena can also give rise to explanations in different modes , as in ( 11 ) , ( 12 ) and ( 13 ) :
18 Second , it must arise in circumstances which also give rise to proceedings already or simultaneously brought before an industrial tribunal .
19 The rapid growth of private charity in these years also gave rise to institutions demonstrating a variety of approaches to the palliation of poverty .
20 These provisions gave rise to uncertainty largely because the courts showed a marked reluctance to interpret them according to the ordinary meaning of such words as ‘ void , and they also gave rise to injustice because under the Common Law an infant could still sue an adult upon a contract unenforceable against himself and incapable of ratification by him .
21 The same incident also gave rise to complaints by a number of members of the public in respect of the conduct of several police officers who had attended it .
22 This was the simultaneous introduction of several indissolubly linked institutions : monogamy ( which later gave rise to polyandry and polygamy ) , the nuclear family , private property ( the property of the nuclear family ) , the change in the rule of descent from the female line to the male line , the subordination and humiliation of women , and the State .
23 THE acoustics at the Anglican Cathedral have often given rise to speculation about its suitability for Philharmonic concerts .
24 In a brief to me and my colleagues , my local authority wrote : ’ In addition , because of its very nature as a combined personal/property tax , movements of individuals within a household will inevitably give rise to changes in liability .
25 The employment of women with small children or dependent relatives will inevitably give rise to situations which interfere with the nurse 's attendance at work .
26 These inequalities inevitably give rise to resentment .
27 All that one can profitably do is concentrate on weeding out the propositions with faulty grammar and those that contextually give rise to paradoxes .
28 Although it is easy to observe what is going on in practice , constructing an explicit statement of what the system is that is being considered inevitably gives rise to problems of interpretation and semantics .
29 It inevitably gave rise to speculation amongst his companions .
30 The form of personal rule which Maclean established inevitably gave rise to claims that he was , if not actually involved in slave-trading and slave-holding , insufficiently energetic in combating them .
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